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Casual Articles - The Pros And Cons Of Internet Shopping - A Guide For Individuals And Businesses
Things to Consider While Writing a Newsletter iving down prices, one thing became clear: people want an end-to-end experience. This means they want satisfaction from the first – confirmation emails, detailed tracking of delivery, fast shipping, reliable handling, guarantees, human and helpful customer service, a check-back and continuing support from the business. These comments applied not just to ebay of course, but to the thousands of other online businesses that provide goods and services to shoppers everyday.Newsletter copywriting is a nut that is not very hard to crack once you get to know the right way to do it. It’s rather like writing (read clicking) for Playboy, only the Centerfold needs to be at every fold.A Newsletter is a medium that organizations use not only for effective advertisement but also continuous promotion of their ever evolving products. A newsletter, hence, is the synonym of a picture that is worth not a mere thousand words, but a thousand current and future consumers as well. This is where the art of Newsletter Copywriting comes in handy. Just keep in mind a few stitches in time and that will save you a lot of nines.Stick to your lot: A Newsletter is your voice and yours alone. So make sure that it is only you and your lot that the customer hears about.Do your homework: Before writing newsletter, go that extra mile and gather information about every nook and cran The issue of shopper security has become so important that the Office of Fair Trading commissioned a study in 2004, scheduled to mature in 2007, which will examine awareness amongst shoppers and traders. It will look closely at whether businesses are aware of regulations, and whether individuals are aware of their rights. Did you know, for example, that as consumers we are entitled to a “cooling off period” of 7 days, within which we can expect a refund if we are not satisfied? Try telling that to Brand Match And Brand Usage - Can't Hurt If They Use The Product Too good to be true?Chapter 4 of 14When selecting a celebrity endorser it should go without saying that you need to select a person who matches the goals of your product or company and its brand message. Too often I see brands using individuals that do not match the demographics or targeted consumer. Why is that? I think many times companies are just so caught up in using a celebrity they tend to overlook what the message is and who it ultimately needs to reach. In the case of a large company, it is safe to say they have conducted extensive research to make sure the fit is correct for the company. However, things can and do backfire. The most recent example of that would be McDonald’s and Kobe. Here is a situation that when the relationship started it was the perfect match, at least on paper. In one fleeting moment the well thought out strategic plan turned into a media nightmare for both McDonald’s and Ko The pros and cons of internet trading, a brief guide by Ed Baker. A new market has emerged. It is now commonly known that the last five years has seen an unprecedented rise in internet shopping, both in terms of commercial sales and private transactions. The online retail giant Amazon, who began life selling books, reported a 20% hike in sales in the first quarter of this year, to the tune of $2.28 billion. On average in the UK, 2.5% of household spending is now online, and this figure is rising. The phenomenon of search – the internets’ ability to deliver potential answers to our infinite questions – has been the key benefit to the online trader. Search engines bring the market to the marketplace. Increasingly, they are being paid to do it. Google’s AdWords program accounted for over 30% of its income last year, as it promises to deliver targeted “traffic” to online business. One cannot perform a search nowadays, it seems, without happening upon a sponsored result near the top of that little green column to the right of your screen that says, “get cheap ‘*******’ on ebay, buy it now for ‘?***!’” A new market brings new challenges. So it is that ebay has become the prominent location for people to buy and sell their wares online. Implicitly transferring Harrods’ “anything from a pin to an elephant” claim to the ether, the buyer is assured that he will be able to find literally anything for sale in the auction sites’ vast virtual stockroom. It is this very vastness however that has begun to spell trouble for the company, and its consumers. The lack of human interaction, guarantees, a bricks-and-mortar existence, and the absence of strict and comprehensive regulations have allowed unscrupulous dealers to flourish online, particularly on the larger auction sites. People create an identity, advertise a product they may not even have, collect the money and simply vanish. More disturbingly, sophisticated criminals are now able to use sensitive credit card information from other online consumers to assume identities and buy goods. Witness the recent case of Terrill D Johnson of Ilyssa Way Ohio, who used credit card receipts to obtain $18000 worth of merchandise through Amazon. The global nature of ebay has brought its own pitfalls. Many buyers and sellers are not aware of the cultural or legal differences governing trade outside the borders, with the result that buyers foot huge premiums for the processing of foreign orders and often end up empty-handed if they unwittingly attempt to purchase something prohibited in their country. One of the common misconceptions about ebay is that if the seller has lots of feedback, the majority of it positive, they are a safer prospect. Recent studies have shown this is simply not true. Satisfied buyers on the whole don’t bother to leave feedback, they just get on with enjoying whatever they bought, hence the presence of a dialogue between buyer and seller can often indicate some problem or lack of clarity somewhere in the transaction. In April of this year I attended a market research evening for ebay, run by the company Saros, who source everyday consumers to give detailed information and constructive criticism about a particular product or service. The three hour session focused entirely on buyer security, indicating that ebay has recognised the widely-held view that its’ site favours the seller and affords inadequate protection to the prospective buyer. A new marketing model emerges The experience shed light on an interesting concept that I believe some businesses are already developing, and more and more will need to devote time to – that of the “user journey”. While the existing benefits of the internet were identified and appreciated at the session; the ability to browse, compare, search and research, and the lack of overheads driving down prices, one thing became clear: people want an end-to-end experience. This means they want satisfaction from the first – confirmation emails, detailed tracking of delivery, fast shipping, reliable handling, guarantees, human and helpful customer service, a check-back and continuing support from the business. These comments applied not just to ebay of course, but to the thousands of other online businesses that provide goods and services to shoppers everyday. The issue of shopper security has become so important that the Office of Fair Trading commissioned a study in 2004, scheduled to mature in 2007, which will examine awareness amongst shoppers and traders. It will look closely at whether businesses are aware of regulations, and whether individuals are aware of their rights. Did you know, for example, that as consumers we are entitled to a “cooling off period” of 7 days, within which we can expect a refund if we are not satisfied? Try telling that to How To Get Yourself Promoted without happening upon a sponsored result near the top of that little green column to the right of your screen that says,
“get cheap ‘*******’ on ebay, buy it now for ‘?***!’”The conventional employee mindset could be holding you back, keeping you from climbing the ladder as fast as you could with a different outlook.If you’re like most employees, you think of yourself as a pawn. You think it is up to ‘’them’’ to promote you. Being honest, you don’t want to ingratiate yourself with your boss, flatter him or butter him up. You might also hate selling yourself if that means talking a lot about how great you are. So, you keep your head down and work hard, waiting for your boss to come along and tap you on the shoulder. When it doesn’t happen, what do you do? Again, if you’re like most employees, you start showing your resentment. You start complaining about being overlooked, demanding your rights.But this is a lose-lose strategy. Try viewing yourself as a business, say a self-employed consultant or service provider. If you were indeed running your own business, A new market brings new challenges. So it is that ebay has become the prominent location for people to buy and sell their wares online. Implicitly transferring Harrods’ “anything from a pin to an elephant” claim to the ether, the buyer is assured that he will be able to find literally anything for sale in the auction sites’ vast virtual stockroom. It is this very vastness however that has begun to spell trouble for the company, and its consumers. The lack of human interaction, guarantees, a bricks-and-mortar existence, and the absence of strict and comprehensive regulations have allowed unscrupulous dealers to flourish online, particularly on the larger auction sites. People create an identity, advertise a product they may not even have, collect the money and simply vanish. More disturbingly, sophisticated criminals are now able to use sensitive credit card information from other online consumers to assume identities and buy goods. Witness the recent case of Terrill D Johnson of Ilyssa Way Ohio, who used credit card receipts to obtain $18000 worth of merchandise through Amazon. The global nature of ebay has brought its own pitfalls. Many buyers and sellers are not aware of the cultural or legal differences governing trade outside the borders, with the result that buyers foot huge premiums for the processing of foreign orders and often end up empty-handed if they unwittingly attempt to purchase something prohibited in their country. One of the common misconceptions about ebay is that if the seller has lots of feedback, the majority of it positive, they are a safer prospect. Recent studies have shown this is simply not true. Satisfied buyers on the whole don’t bother to leave feedback, they just get on with enjoying whatever they bought, hence the presence of a dialogue between buyer and seller can often indicate some problem or lack of clarity somewhere in the transaction. In April of this year I attended a market research evening for ebay, run by the company Saros, who source everyday consumers to give detailed information and constructive criticism about a particular product or service. The three hour session focused entirely on buyer security, indicating that ebay has recognised the widely-held view that its’ site favours the seller and affords inadequate protection to the prospective buyer. A new marketing model emerges The experience shed light on an interesting concept that I believe some businesses are already developing, and more and more will need to devote time to – that of the “user journey”. While the existing benefits of the internet were identified and appreciated at the session; the ability to browse, compare, search and research, and the lack of overheads driving down prices, one thing became clear: people want an end-to-end experience. This means they want satisfaction from the first – confirmation emails, detailed tracking of delivery, fast shipping, reliable handling, guarantees, human and helpful customer service, a check-back and continuing support from the business. These comments applied not just to ebay of course, but to the thousands of other online businesses that provide goods and services to shoppers everyday. The issue of shopper security has become so important that the Office of Fair Trading commissioned a study in 2004, scheduled to mature in 2007, which will examine awareness amongst shoppers and traders. It will look closely at whether businesses are aware of regulations, and whether individuals are aware of their rights. Did you know, for example, that as consumers we are entitled to a “cooling off period” of 7 days, within which we can expect a refund if we are not satisfied? Try telling that to IT Service Management ore disturbingly, sophisticated criminals are now able to use sensitive credit card information from other online consumers to assume identities and buy goods. Witness the recent case of Terrill D Johnson of Ilyssa Way Ohio, who used credit card receipts to obtain $18000 worth of merchandise through Amazon.The Internet has undoubtedly conquered every aspect of the business arena. It is rare to find business offices without computers these days. Practically a hundred percent of the business offices in the United States own computers to process their business transactions. This holds true in other first world countries such as Japan, Western Europe and China. In a simplified concept, the face of the earth is basically connected to the worldwide web that makes business more profitable and accessible.Information technology is soaring these days. However, connectivity does not solve the entire problem, and it is a fact that cannot be ignored. But, the availability of cost-effective IT service management opens doors for network problem solutions. Internet connectivity coupled with high quality IT service management pave way for an increasingly competitive, technological future for the entire world to e The global nature of ebay has brought its own pitfalls. Many buyers and sellers are not aware of the cultural or legal differences governing trade outside the borders, with the result that buyers foot huge premiums for the processing of foreign orders and often end up empty-handed if they unwittingly attempt to purchase something prohibited in their country. One of the common misconceptions about ebay is that if the seller has lots of feedback, the majority of it positive, they are a safer prospect. Recent studies have shown this is simply not true. Satisfied buyers on the whole don’t bother to leave feedback, they just get on with enjoying whatever they bought, hence the presence of a dialogue between buyer and seller can often indicate some problem or lack of clarity somewhere in the transaction. In April of this year I attended a market research evening for ebay, run by the company Saros, who source everyday consumers to give detailed information and constructive criticism about a particular product or service. The three hour session focused entirely on buyer security, indicating that ebay has recognised the widely-held view that its’ site favours the seller and affords inadequate protection to the prospective buyer. A new marketing model emerges The experience shed light on an interesting concept that I believe some businesses are already developing, and more and more will need to devote time to – that of the “user journey”. While the existing benefits of the internet were identified and appreciated at the session; the ability to browse, compare, search and research, and the lack of overheads driving down prices, one thing became clear: people want an end-to-end experience. This means they want satisfaction from the first – confirmation emails, detailed tracking of delivery, fast shipping, reliable handling, guarantees, human and helpful customer service, a check-back and continuing support from the business. These comments applied not just to ebay of course, but to the thousands of other online businesses that provide goods and services to shoppers everyday. The issue of shopper security has become so important that the Office of Fair Trading commissioned a study in 2004, scheduled to mature in 2007, which will examine awareness amongst shoppers and traders. It will look closely at whether businesses are aware of regulations, and whether individuals are aware of their rights. Did you know, for example, that as consumers we are entitled to a “cooling off period” of 7 days, within which we can expect a refund if we are not satisfied? Try telling that to My Favourite Methods of Free Traffic Generation bought, hence the presence of a dialogue between buyer and seller can often indicate some problem or lack of clarity somewhere in the transaction.If you are an internet marketer then you should know by now that traffic is the lifeblood of your business and without it you stand no chance of surviving. There are literally hundreds of ways to get traffic to your website, but we don’t want any old traffic, we want free and targeted traffic so we can fully maximise the potential of our websites.My favourite method of traffic generation is by utilizing the power of article writing and submission. It’s by no means a unique method, but it is highly effective. Not only does article submission generate traffic for your website through the use of an author resource box, it also boosts your search engine ranking because of an increased number of link backs to your site.An article can be written in around 20-40 minutes and submitted to hundreds of directories with just a further 10 minutes work. There are many services around which will automa In April of this year I attended a market research evening for ebay, run by the company Saros, who source everyday consumers to give detailed information and constructive criticism about a particular product or service. The three hour session focused entirely on buyer security, indicating that ebay has recognised the widely-held view that its’ site favours the seller and affords inadequate protection to the prospective buyer. A new marketing model emerges The experience shed light on an interesting concept that I believe some businesses are already developing, and more and more will need to devote time to – that of the “user journey”. While the existing benefits of the internet were identified and appreciated at the session; the ability to browse, compare, search and research, and the lack of overheads driving down prices, one thing became clear: people want an end-to-end experience. This means they want satisfaction from the first – confirmation emails, detailed tracking of delivery, fast shipping, reliable handling, guarantees, human and helpful customer service, a check-back and continuing support from the business. These comments applied not just to ebay of course, but to the thousands of other online businesses that provide goods and services to shoppers everyday. The issue of shopper security has become so important that the Office of Fair Trading commissioned a study in 2004, scheduled to mature in 2007, which will examine awareness amongst shoppers and traders. It will look closely at whether businesses are aware of regulations, and whether individuals are aware of their rights. Did you know, for example, that as consumers we are entitled to a “cooling off period” of 7 days, within which we can expect a refund if we are not satisfied? Try telling that to A Business Meta - Fore iving down prices, one thing became clear: people want an end-to-end experience. This means they want satisfaction from the first – confirmation emails, detailed tracking of delivery, fast shipping, reliable handling, guarantees, human and helpful customer service, a check-back and continuing support from the business. These comments applied not just to ebay of course, but to the thousands of other online businesses that provide goods and services to shoppers everyday.Many professional golfers go on to develop successful and significant business interests. Greg Norman is a standout example of this. Many senior business leaders play golf at a high level. This link between success at golf and successful business may not be coincidental, the attributes required for both are very similar. Consider the following.Applying FundamentalsChampion golfers spend hours getting the fundamentals right. They call this practicing. Very few golfers become champions without establishing the right grip, shoulder turn and stance. These fundamentals are developed and harnessed with extraordinary rigour. Still fewer champion golfers spend their time ‘reinventing the wheel’. Reverse grips and broomstick putters were an evolution in the game aimed at overcoming ‘the yips’ not a means of improving putting.Business also relies on fundamentals – the funda The issue of shopper security has become so important that the Office of Fair Trading commissioned a study in 2004, scheduled to mature in 2007, which will examine awareness amongst shoppers and traders. It will look closely at whether businesses are aware of regulations, and whether individuals are aware of their rights. Did you know, for example, that as consumers we are entitled to a “cooling off period” of 7 days, within which we can expect a refund if we are not satisfied? Try telling that to the bloke you just bought a dodgy Ford Sierra from over ebay last week. The advice is simple – do your homework. The internet is the single greatest resource for an individual to research a given topic. Spend some time comparing prices, services and market value. You can use www.BizRate.com to check ratings of vendors posted by their customers, and you can read independent reviews of products before you buy at www.cnet.com. Examine the companies carefully – are there any hidden costs? How do they make their money? Honest businesses will be upfront about commission and delivery charges. They should also have an address or at least phone number, preferably toll-free, where you can talk to a customer service representative for your own peace of mind. A money back guarantee is a must if you can get it, and if buying from an individual, find out as much as you can – do they have a number or email address? Strike up a dialogue and don’t buy blind! Trust – the key to success. As a seller, all of the above must be taken into account, with one concept at the front of your mind – trust. Businesses especially must strive to build trust into their reputation. They must meet the needs of the consumer in providing a real physical identity to back up their online presence –the website is not enough. Be open, be honest, keep it simple. It is better to specialise in one type of product or service than to have a free-for-all; imagine how impossible it must be to police ebay and how confusing it is to a first-time buyer. For variety and value, not to mention freedom from the old-fashioned “hard-sell”, the internet is becoming the number one choice for today’s consumer, and it is beginning to produce its own code of business practice. For companies in particular, the goal must be to set new standards of service with a simple, clear, guaranteed and reliable service, underwritten by an accountable, human presence offline. For more information on internet trading you can read “Don’t get burned on ebay” by Shauna Wright, O’Reilly press, and “ebay – the missing manual” by Nancy Conner, Pogue press. Ed Baker is business development manager for allticketclub.com, an online site for buying and selling event tickets, currently the market leader for customer satisfaction and customer repeat business.
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